Isaiah 66:10-14
Psalm 66:1-7, 16, 20
Galatians 6:14-18
Luke 10:1-12, 17-20
“Do not rejoice because the
spirits are subject to you, but rejoice because your names are written in
Heaven.”
Death, Judgment, Heaven, and
Hell are not exactly the most popular conversation pieces, nor are they the
most exciting thoughts to take to prayer and reflection. The uncertainty of the
afterlife and the understandable fear of death, judgment, and hell is one
reason to avoid the topic, as is our the difficulty at grasping the reality of spiritual
things and concepts like ‘eternity’. But in my reflections I came to see that,
at least for myself, the main reason why I fail to reflect enough on these Last
Things is because of a sin called presumption. ‘Surely that won’t happen to me!’
we can think. It’s not always a conscious thought, but there is something in me
– and maybe in you as well - that presumes because I am a good person my name
is already written in Heaven and I expect to get in.
Expecting to get to heaven,
though, isn’t a bad thing. In fact that Catechism
of the Catholic Church tells us that hope is “the theological virtue by which we desire and expect from God both
eternal life and the grace we need to attain it” (Glossary, referencing #1817). So what is the difference between
expecting heaven as a virtue (hope) and expecting heaven as a sin
(presumption)? It all comes down to our willingness to work with the Lord. The
definition of hope includes the recognition of our need for grace to work with
the Lord to attain salvation. Presumption is when we simply expect to get to
heaven but fail to put forth the effort to make that expectation a reality. It’s
a subtle difference, but that’s how the devil works. He takes something of the
truth and tweaks it to be also a lie. We usually don’t accept things that are
blatantly false. But, as the devil knows well, we will often take in that
little truth that we see and fail to see the negative effects that are included
alongside it.
For instance: Is God merciful?
Absolutely! God is mercy itself, manifested most clearly through the sign of
the Cross. We’ve heard week after week how merciful God is, that there is
nothing that we can do that will make Him quit loving us. And every bit of that
is true. But I guarantee that everyone in this church has experienced this
scenario: you’re in a little gathering with friends and it’s a lighthearted
conversation. You get to a point when someone is talking about doing something that
is a sin, and then the little joke comes – ‘oh, it’s not a big deal. That’s what confession is for! God will
forgive you!’ Presumption upon God’s mercy. We know the Lord is merciful
and we use it to our advantage to do as we please because ‘we can always go to
confession.’
Or this one: God understands!
Does God understand us? Absolutely! He created us and knows us more than we
know ourselves. And when we’re in the midst of a struggle – or maybe not much
of a struggle – with a thought of doing something that we know is wrong the
easy out is always ‘God understands’. ‘God
knows my heart. God understands that I’m weak. God understands.’ And then
we give ourselves permission to do as we please, presuming on God’s love and
awareness of our brokenness.
And the most grievous is
presumption that we’re going to heaven. I’m pretty sure most of us would think of
ourselves as good people. We do things for the Church here and there, we make
our Sunday obligation, we try to live good most of the time and we content
ourselves with that. We become comfortable being good. But the problem is that
the devil wants us to be good people. Think about that. The devil wants us to be good people. Why? Because the Father calls us
to be perfect. If we content ourselves with being good, then we cease
striving for perfection. One day we were talking about striving for perfection
in class at the seminary and our professor wisely said, “Men, I don’t want to
live a good life hoping to flop over the line into purgatory because if I fall
short I wind up in hell. I want to live a life striving to be perfect and get
straight to heaven because then if I fall a little short, I still wind up in
purgatory.” We don’t like to think that we could go to hell. It’s not a thought
any of us enjoys hearing, but the truth is that if we don’t actually try to get
to heaven, with God’s grace, then we might well miss the boat.
God doesn’t want us to miss
out on the joys of heaven; it was for eternal LIFE that we created us in the
first place, but we must choose that life and show my our actions here on earth
that we long to be with him forever in heaven. So let us today as the Lord for
the grace in this Eucharist to root out any sins of presumption that may rest
in our hearts and fill us with zeal to strive for holiness here on earth that
we can rejoice at beholding His face for eternity in Heaven.
Stained Glass of Four Last Things at Sacred Heart Church, Baton Rouge, LA |
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